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Monday, September 9, 2013

What Ever Happened to Mary Ingalls?

What Ever Happened to Mary Ingalls?

Megan A. Conway, Ph.D.

RDS Managing Editor

Photo of Mary Ingalls in Real Life

Photo of Actress Who Plays Mary Ingalls on TV

Since this issue features a forum on the family, I knew
that I could easily write an editorial focused on my own family experiences.
But then I realized that many of my editorials focus on my family! After all,
my family is the most important thing in my life. Who wants to read another
editorial about the exploits of my eight-year-old daughter? So instead I am
going to focus on another family. They are the Ingalls family, and most
interestingly,Mary Ingalls, the blind sister of the book and American TV
show’s main protagonist, Laura Ingalls.

For those of you unfamiliar with the American classic saga
of the Ingalls family, their journey by covered wagon in the 1870’s from the
state of Wisconsin, through Kansas, Minnesota and finally into South Dakota, is
told rather charmingly in the children’s series, The Little House Books,
by Laura Ingalls Wilder. Laura wrote the fictionalized story of her family’s
true journey when she was an older adult. I devoured these books as a child,
and even lived their stories of pioneer hardship, family love and adventure in
play with my friends. In the 1970’s Michael Landon directed and starred in the TV
series, Little House on the Prairie, which was a big hit for family
television and ran for nine seasons. The TV series diverges from the books in
countless ways, but the primary themes of family and hardship remain, with the
appearance of familiar characters from the books including Laura, her “Pa” and
“Ma”, and her three sisters: Mary, Carrie and Grace.

In real-life, the book, and the TV
series, Mary becomes blind as a teenager, due to a then-unidentified illness
that for many years was said to be Scarlet Fever but that more recently is
thought to have been Meningitis. In the book, and presumably in real life,
blindness is for Mary the end of all expectations that she will realize her
hopes of becoming a teacher or of having a family. Laura’s descriptions of Mary
in the Little House booksare of someone who suffers her blindness
without complaint, always “patient and brave”, who at first spends days upon
end in a rocking chair in the corner, but who gradually learns to contribute to
household chores and childcare.

As told in the Little House
books and according to Wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary_Ingalls) although Mary does have the
opportunity to attend a school for the blind in Iowa where she is educated and
learns vocational and housekeeping skills, she lives with her parents or
sisters for her entire life and never has a family of her own. Her primary
vocations include involvement in church life with her mother, and making fly
masks for horses to help make ends meet after her father dies.

As a child I never noticed the sad plight of Mary, other
than to sympathize with her blindness in a general way. I never connected her
blindness to mine, or noticed any difference between her sheltered life and my
life of “mainstream” schools, wandering the neighborhoods of San Francisco with
friends, and dreaming of a career as a movie star (or lawyer if that didn’t
work out). As an adult, Mary’s situation seems to me to be dreary and
representative of the constraints that disability has placed on people of the
past, and unfortunately, on people of the present. Why could not Mary have had
a family of her own and pursued a career as a teacher, even if “only” as a
teacher of others who were blind?

Apparently the creators of the Little House on the
Prairie TV series thought the same. In the concluding episode of Season
Three, Mary is slowly going blind. In the book By the Shores of Silver Lake, Laura writes, “All that long time,
week after week, when she could still see a little, but less every day, [Mary]
had never cried” (p. 2). In the TV
episode, we counted no less than seven bouts of tears in the one-hour episode,
from each of Mary, Pa, Ma, Laura, friends and neighbors. In any case, in this
final episode, before she became blind Mary was being courted by a neighbor boy
but her blindness puts an end to that (and not without a choice scene featuring
Mary screaming at the hapless lad, “Get out of here, just get out!” and then,
you guessed it, bursting into tears). So Mary is shipped off to a school for
the blind, where she seemingly spends about a month (but actually spent eight
years). There she meets her teacher “Adam”, who it turns out is very young and
very handsome (of course she can’t see him but we sure can). Adam teaches Mary
some important life skill lessons (“You will learn to eat with a fork!”) and
apparently some other skills as well, as Mary and Adam fall in love and the
Season ends with plans for their future together helping other blind people.

I definitely prefer the TV version of Mary’s
prospects. According to a website
devoted to the history of the Iowa Braille School (http://www.iowa-braille.k12.ia.us/vnews/display.v/ART/4921ebc684123): “All
social interaction, in any event, was done under the close supervision of a
dormitory officer or teacher. Many deep friendships developed through the
planned social activities, some of which resulted in marriage after graduation.
Mary, however, did not choose to marry.” The real Mary Ingalls left a much
smaller mark on the world than her TV persona. Did she ever sneak away to kiss
a sweetheart when the dorm mother wasn’t looking? Did she truly live a life of
pious spinsterhood as the limited records about her would suggest? Did she have
a choice? Mary’s place as a family member, both in the home and without, was
seemingly dictated by her blindness rather than informed by it. I wish history
indicated otherwise.

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